At a meeting with
environmental and human rights groups this past December, a U.N. investigator
voiced severe criticisms against United States' regulations concerning
pesticide exports, according to Ascribe. Investigating for the U.N. Commission
on Human Rights, Fatma Zora Ouchachi-Vesely studied U.S. practices of
trafficking pesticides and other toxins. Ms. Vesely deemed the U.S. practice
of exporting harmful pesticides to other countries that have been banned
within the United States as immoral.

She met with government
officials and non-governmental organizations to gather the data she needed.
Government officials informed her that international free-trade agreements
allow for pesticides be exported without regulation to countries that
demand them, whether or not they are banned within the United States.
However, non-governmental organizations say this demand is a result of
promotional campaigns funded by companies that profit from pesticide sales.
These countries should also have resources explaining the dangers that
pesticides pose. Furthermore, "developing countries do not have the
medical or regulatory capacity to address the negative effects of these
chemicals on their population. That is what makes this is an immoral practice,"
Ms. Vesely explained.

Vesely concluded that
the export of dangerous pesticides greatly affects human rights. "Even
if something is marked 'poison' it tends to be shipped in large amounts,
then transferred to smaller containers without proper labeling for local
sale and use. And the people actually using the products often cannot
read anyway," said Vesely. The International Labor organization reported
that 65 to 90 percent of children working in Africa, Asia and Latin America
work in the agriculture sector. They are exposed to pesticides as they
work, as well as through their water and at home. Americans are also affected
by the pesticides banned within their own country through food imports.